The fast_float library provides fast header-only implementations for the C++ from_chars functions for float
and double
types. These functions convert ASCII strings representing decimal values (e.g., 1.3e10
) into binary types. We provide exact rounding (including round to even). In our experience, these fast_float
functions many times faster than comparable number-parsing functions from existing C++ standard libraries.
Specifically, fast_float
provides the following two functions with a C++17-like syntax (the library itself only requires C++11):
from_chars_result from_chars(const char* first, const char* last, float& value, ...); from_chars_result from_chars(const char* first, const char* last, double& value, ...);
The return type (from_chars_result
) is defined as the struct:
struct from_chars_result { const char* ptr; std::errc ec; };
It parses the character sequence [first,last) for a number. It parses floating-point numbers expecting a locale-independent format equivalent to the C++17 from_chars function. The resulting floating-point value is the closest floating-point values (using either float or double), using the “round to even” convention for values that would otherwise fall right in-between two values. That is, we provide exact parsing according to the IEEE standard.
Given a successful parse, the pointer (ptr
) in the returned value is set to point right after the parsed number, and the value
referenced is set to the parsed value. In case of error, the returned ec
contains a representative error, otherwise the default (std::errc()
) value is stored.
The implementation does not throw and does not allocate memory (e.g., with new
or malloc
).
It will parse infinity and nan values.
Example:
#include "fast_float/fast_float.h" #include <iostream> int main() { const std::string input = "3.1416 xyz "; double result; auto answer = fast_float::from_chars(input.data(), input.data()+input.size(), result); if(answer.ec != std::errc()) { std::cerr << "parsing failure\n"; return EXIT_FAILURE; } std::cout << "parsed the number " << result << std::endl; return EXIT_SUCCESS; }
Like the C++17 standard, the fast_float::from_chars
functions take an optional last argument of the type fast_float::chars_format
. It is a bitset value: we check whether fmt & fast_float::chars_format::fixed
and fmt & fast_float::chars_format::scientific
are set to determine whether we allow the fixed point and scientific notation respectively. The default is fast_float::chars_format::general
which allows both fixed
and scientific
.
The library seeks to follow the C++17 (see 20.19.3.(7.1)) specification.
from_chars
function does not skip leading white-space characters.+
sign is forbidden.float
and double
types). We seek the nearest value. We round to an even mantissa when we are in-between two binary floating-point numbers.Furthermore, we have the following restrictions:
float
and double
types at this time.1e9999
), we represent it using the infinity or negative infinity value.We support Visual Studio, macOS, Linux, freeBSD. We support big and little endian. We support 32-bit and 64-bit systems.
We assume that the rounding mode is set to nearest (std::fegetround() == FE_TONEAREST
).
The C++ standard stipulate that from_chars
has to be locale-independent. In particular, the decimal separator has to be the period (.
). However, some users still want to use the fast_float
library with in a locale-dependent manner. Using a separate function called from_chars_advanced
, we allow the users to pass a parse_options
instance which contains a custom decimal separator (e.g., the comma). You may use it as follows.
#include "fast_float/fast_float.h" #include <iostream> int main() { const std::string input = "3,1416 xyz "; double result; fast_float::parse_options options{fast_float::chars_format::general, ','}; auto answer = fast_float::from_chars_advanced(input.data(), input.data()+input.size(), result, options); if((answer.ec != std::errc()) || ((result != 3.1416))) { std::cerr << "parsing failure\n"; return EXIT_FAILURE; } std::cout << "parsed the number " << result << std::endl; return EXIT_SUCCESS; }
You can parse delimited numbers:
const std::string input = "234532.3426362,7869234.9823,324562.645"; double result; auto answer = fast_float::from_chars(input.data(), input.data()+input.size(), result); if(answer.ec != std::errc()) { // check error } // we have result == 234532.3426362. if(answer.ptr[0] != ',') { // unexpected delimiter } answer = fast_float::from_chars(answer.ptr + 1, input.data()+input.size(), result); if(answer.ec != std::errc()) { // check error } // we have result == 7869234.9823. if(answer.ptr[0] != ',') { // unexpected delimiter } answer = fast_float::from_chars(answer.ptr + 1, input.data()+input.size(), result); if(answer.ec != std::errc()) { // check error } // we have result == 324562.645.
rcppfastfloat
.fast-float-rust
.FastDoubleParser
. It used for important systems such as Jackson.csFastFloat
.The fast_float library is part of GCC (as of version 12): the from_chars
function in GCC relies on fast_float.
The fastfloat algorithm is part of the LLVM standard libraries.
The fast_float library provides a performance similar to that of the fast_double_parser library but using an updated algorithm reworked from the ground up, and while offering an API more in line with the expectations of C++ programmers. The fast_double_parser library is part of the Microsoft LightGBM machine-learning framework.
There is a derived implementation part of AdaCore.
The fast_float library is used by Apache Arrow where it multiplied the number parsing speed by two or three times. It is also used by Yandex ClickHouse and by Google Jsonnet.
It can parse random floating-point numbers at a speed of 1 GB/s on some systems. We find that it is often twice as fast as the best available competitor, and many times faster than many standard-library implementations.
$ ./build/benchmarks/benchmark # parsing random integers in the range [0,1) volume = 2.09808 MB netlib : 271.18 MB/s (+/- 1.2 %) 12.93 Mfloat/s doubleconversion : 225.35 MB/s (+/- 1.2 %) 10.74 Mfloat/s strtod : 190.94 MB/s (+/- 1.6 %) 9.10 Mfloat/s abseil : 430.45 MB/s (+/- 2.2 %) 20.52 Mfloat/s fastfloat : 1042.38 MB/s (+/- 9.9 %) 49.68 Mfloat/s
See https://github.com/lemire/simple_fastfloat_benchmark for our benchmarking code.
This library is header-only by design. The CMake file provides the fast_float
target which is merely a pointer to the include
directory.
If you drop the fast_float
repository in your CMake project, you should be able to use it in this manner:
add_subdirectory(fast_float) target_link_libraries(myprogram PUBLIC fast_float)
Or you may want to retrieve the dependency automatically if you have a sufficiently recent version of CMake (3.11 or better at least):
FetchContent_Declare( fast_float GIT_REPOSITORY https://github.com/lemire/fast_float.git GIT_TAG tags/v1.1.2 GIT_SHALLOW TRUE) FetchContent_MakeAvailable(fast_float) target_link_libraries(myprogram PUBLIC fast_float)
You should change the GIT_TAG
line so that you recover the version you wish to use.
The script script/amalgamate.py
may be used to generate a single header version of the library if so desired. Just run the script from the root directory of this repository. You can customize the license type and output file if desired as described in the command line help.
You may directly download automatically generated single-header files:
https://github.com/fastfloat/fast_float/releases/download/v3.4.0/fast_float.h
Though this work is inspired by many different people, this work benefited especially from exchanges with Michael Eisel, who motivated the original research with his key insights, and with Nigel Tao who provided invaluable feedback. Rémy Oudompheng first implemented a fast path we use in the case of long digits.
The library includes code adapted from Google Wuffs (written by Nigel Tao) which was originally published under the Apache 2.0 license.